In Britain in the early eighteenth century there was no organised public official patronage of the arts, aside from commissions for specific projects. There was no established body to compare with the
Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture that
Jean-Baptiste Colbert had established in France, and no public exhibitions of recent paintings along the lines of the
Paris salons, held every other year. The closest approximation to an academic life-drawing class was established in
Great Queen Street in 1711 under twelve directors, with Sir
Godfrey Kneller as its governor.
George Vertue, a founder-member, describes it as "the Academy of Painting", although there is no evidence that any painting was ever done there. while a faction led by
John Vanderbank and
Louis Chéron set up what they advertised as "The Academy for the Improvement of Painters and Sculptors by drawing from the Naked" at premises in St Martin's Lane. It proved popular, but failed after a few years when the subscriptions were embezzled by the treasurer. in which he takes credit for the democratic principle that all should contribute an equal sum to the Academy's expenses and have an equal vote, "attributing the failure of the previous academies to the leading members having assumed a superiority which their fellow-students could not brook." Thus the academy abandoned
hierarchic seventeenth-century precedents and was formed on the basis of a
club. The members of the academy took turns to "set" the model – that is decide his or her pose – rather than having this done by a paid director of the sort employed in French academies. Hogarth was opposed to copying from pictures, but there may have been casts to work from, inherited from Thornhill's studio. The premises of the Academy were a large room in Peter's Court, entered from St Martin's Lane through a low vaulted passageway. The membership of the academy was formed from an informal, club-like circle that was in the habit of meeting at Old Slaughter's Coffee House, which had been at 74 and 75, St. Martin's Lane since 1692, when the neighbourhood was still distinctly suburban. It was known as"Old" Slaughter's Coffee House after 1742, when a new Slaughter's Coffee House opened, at no. 82 (more recently the site of Westminster County Court). Hogarth seems to have had some assistance in running the academy. but which apparently identifies Wills as the "Fresnoy" who published bitterly sarcastic invective at Sir
Joshua Reynolds and artists like
Zoffany who had left the Society of Artists to join the newly founded Royal Academy. His
conversation piece The Andrews Family (signed "J. Wills pinxit" and dated 1749) is in the collection of the
Fitzwilliam Museum.
Edward Edwards' continuation of Walpole's
Anecdotes of Painters (1808:55) notes that Wills had painted some portraits and historical subjects, "but not meeting much success in his profession he quit it, and having received a liberal education, took orders. He was for some years curate at
Cannons, Middlesex, where the prominent cabinet-maker of St. Martin's Lane
William Hallett had built a residence on part of the foundations of the great demolished house. In 1772 Wills was appointed to the living at Canons by Hallett's grandson, the subject, with his wife, of Gainsborough's
The Morning Walk (1787). Hogarth's involvement with the academy began to decline in 1753, following the circulation by its secretary, Francis Milner Newton, of a letter calling a meeting with the intention of electing 24 artists as professors of a putative public academy. Hogarth had long been opposed to the idea of such an institution. Newton's plans came to nothing, and the academy continued, under
Francis Hayman and
George Michael Moser. Moser moved the school to
Pall Mall in 1767, and it closed four years later, when he became the first keeper of the Royal Academy. ==Membership==